Current Projects and Activities in the Pecos River Basinpecosbasin.tamu.edu/media/1884/overview of...

Preview:

Citation preview

Current Projects Current Projects and Activities in the and Activities in the Pecos River BasinPecos River Basin

The Pecos River meanders over 400 river miles through Texas, before flowing into the Rio Grande River just above Amistad Reservoir

One mature saltcedar tree can consume as much as 200 gallons of water per day?????

Current Projects along the Pecos River

Pecos River Ecosystem ProjectSponsoring Agency: Upper Pecos Soil and Water Conservation DistrictTechnical Support by:

Texas Cooperative ExtensionNatural Resources Conservation ServiceTexas Department of AgricultureTexas Forest Service

Pecos River Advisory CommitteeRed Bluff Water & Power Control DistrictPecos River Compact CommissionPecos River Irrigation and Water Improvement DistrictsSoil and Water Conservation DistrictsPrivate landowners

Pecos Basin Assessment ProgramA multi-agency approach to assessment of the Pecos River Basin

Rio Grande Basin InitiativeProviding funding for the monitoring and evaluation of the Pecos River Project

History of the Pecos River Ecosystem Project

September 97 first meeting in Pecos.May 98 second meeting in Pecos.June 1999 third meeting in Pecos and tour of

New Mexico saltcedar work.June 1999 completed first draft of 24(c)

supplemental label.September 1999 submitted final 24(c) label to

EPA, began first saltcedar treatments

Pecos River Advisory Committee

Began meeting monthly in January 2005Purpose of the Advisory Committee:

….to advise and be a sounding board for projects along the Pecos River in Texas including the Pecos River Ecosystem Project and the Pecos River Basin Assessment Program.

Pecos River Advisory CommitteeMission

To improve water quality and quantity of the Pecos River, to research, develop, and implement wildlife habitat improvement and agricultural practices unique to the Pecos River in Texas through the development of a long-term management plan

Pecos River Management Plan:

1) Herbicide application on saltcedar

2) Debris removal through prescribed burning

3) Long-term management: biological control, spot spraying, native plant restoration.

Application Technology

Concerns:Limiting herbicide contact with off-target vegetation.

Traditional application methods presented several problems.

Spraying at 25-30 mph allows turning without banking

Three section spray boom

15 – 30 – 45 ft. swath width controlled from cockpit

.028 Accuflo Nozzle1000 Micron Droplet15 g/acre TSV

Pecos River Ecosystem ProjectFunding

1999-2000Red Bluff Water and Power Control DistrictSeven local water districts

2001Red Bluff Water and Power Control DistrictState of Texas

2002State of Texas

2003-2004USDA NRCS EQIPState Brush Control Program

Pecos River Ecosystem Project Acres Treated 1999-2004

Year Treated

Cost Total Acres Treated

$125,020 658

676

1439

3567

3730

2697

12,767

$128,535

$263,000

$660,000

2003 $783,300 2667

2004 $566,170 1967

$2,526,015

River Acres Treated

1999 658

676

1417

2279

Total 9,664

2000

2001

2002

Pecos River Ecosystem Project$Funding$Year Local State Federal* Total1999 125,020 125,0202000 128,535 128,5352001 263,000 263,0002002 660,000 660,0002003 195,825 587,475 7833002004 141,540 424,620 566,160Total 253,555 1,260,365 1,012,095 2,526,015

Percent 10% 50% 40%*Unofficial cost estimates

Pecos River Miles Treated 1999-2004Segment Miles Cumulative Miles Treated Miles LeftRed bluff to Mentone bridge 40 40 40 0

Mentone bridge to Barstow dam 26 66 26 0

Barstow dam to I-20 20 87 20 0

I-20 to Grandfalls 37 124 37 0

Grandfalls to Girvin 89 213 34 55

Girvin to Iraan 53 266 32 21

Iraan to I-10 19 285 18 1

I-10 to Val Verde Co. line 56 341 42 14

Val Verde Co. to hwy 90 bridge 77 418 22 55

SUM 418 271 147Percent of River Miles Treated 64.8%

Pecos River Ecosystem Project1999-2004

11,500 total estimated acres on Pecos Main Stream9,664 acres treated through 2004Estimated 1,830 acres left to treat84% completion of initial phase

Pecos River Ecosystem Project

Saltcedar mortality estimates made during summer 2003

Mentone Bridge Pre-Treatment

Mentone Bridge 12 Months Post-Treatment

Mentone Bridge 24 Months Post-Treatment

Mentone Bridge 36 Months Post-Treatment

Mentone Bridge 48 Months Post-Treatment

Mentone Bridge 60 Months Post-Treatment

Phase 2

Debris Burning

Pecos River Basin Assessment Program

Provided by the Texas State Soil and Water Conservation Board (TSSWCB)through the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) Clean Water Act Section 319(h) grant.

Funding

Multi-Agency Effort

Texas Cooperative Extension

Texas Agricultural Experiment Station

Texas Water Resources Institute

International Boundary and Water Commission – Clean Rivers Program

Need for the ProjectLargest U.S. river sub-basin flowing into the Rio Grande

Only perennial surface water source between the Colorado & Rio Grande riversA significant portion of economic activity in river basin is dependant on the Pecos river and adjacent ground water.

Accounts for 11% of stream inflow into Amistad Reservoir

Contributes 29.5% of total salt loading into Amistad

Need for the Project

Invasive plant species

Biological diversity

Water quality

Project Objectives

Task 1: Assess physical features of the Pecos River basinTask 2: Facilitate communications with stakeholders and landownersTask 3: Monitoring/Research ProgramTask 4: Develop long-term Watershed Management Plan for Pecos River in Texas

Task 1: Basin Assessment

Identify, characterize, and evaluate physical features of the Pecos River

Aspects will be viewed from a historical perspective as well as current conditions

Task 1: Basin Assessment

Environmental, Social, & Economic Inventories of:

Historical informationLand & water useEconomic modelingRiparian vegetationAquatic habitats

March 2005

Task 1: Basin Assessment

Detailed salinity evaluation and modelEvaluate and map salinity sources including influence of tributaries.Salinity modeling of influences on Red Bluff Reservoir.Evaluate salinity effects of Pecos River on Amistad Reservoir.Evaluate alternative long-term strategies to minimize salt loading.

Task 2: Educational Programming

PublicationsHistorical progression of Pecos River basin

Summary of the multi-disciplinary approach to monitoring the river and basin

Detailed summary of the watershed plan to be developed

Development of a website to disseminate information

Task 2: Educational Programming

Educational MeetingsInformational

Project awareness

Skill DevelopingNatural Resources training for landowners

DiscoveryStakeholder involvement in plan development

Public commentFeedback on proposed management plan

Task 3: Monitoring Program

Develop a Quality Assurance Project Plan (QAPP) for sampling protocol

Water Quality MonitoringTotal Dissolved Solids (TDS)Total Suspended Solids (TSS)Parts Hydrogen (pH)Dissolved Oxygen (DO)Electrical Conductivity (EC)

Task 3: Monitoring Program

Quantity and fate of water salvage due to saltcedar control

Determine water salvageCharacterize the aquifer with borehole exploration & monitoring wellsEvaluate flow regimesModel hydrologic impacts of saltcedar control

Using Shallow groundwater wells with pressure sensitive data loggers for calculating water loss.

Untreated Site, July 2001-2003

0

1

2

3

4

5

6

Wat

er L

evel

(ft.)

2001

2002

2003

Treated Site, July 2001-2003

0

1

2

3

4

5

6

Wat

er L

evel

(ft.)

2001

2002

2003

Total Water Loss on Sites A&B from Well 1

5.646.36 6.65

9.70

0.57 0.140.00

2.00

4.00

6.00

8.00

10.00

12.00

2001 2002 2003

(Fee

t)

Site B (Untreated) Site A (Treated)

Site A saltcedar treated after 2001 growing season shows dramatic decrease in water loss. Site B remains untreated through 2003.

Fate of salvaged water• Field measurement

Water levelsWater qualityRiver flows

Develop cross sectional profiles of treated and untreated areas along with detailed flow measurements between sites

Task 4: Watershed Management Plan

Develop initial plan

Modify plan to include ongoing research & stakeholder input

Develop final plan for public comment

Submit final Watershed Management Plan

For more information:

pecosbasin.tamu.edu

Riogrande.tamu.edu